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Stanford researchers make ammonia from water droplets and nitrogen from the air
Stanford researchers have discovered a simple and environmentally sound way to make ammonia from tiny water droplets and nitrogen from the air.
The researchers applied the catalyst to a graphite mesh that Xiaowei Song, a postdoctoral scholar, incorporated into a gas-powered sprayer. The sprayer blasted out microdroplets in which pumped water (H2O) and compressed molecular nitrogen (N2) reacted together in the presence of the catalyst. Using a device called a mass spectrometer, Song analysed the microdroplets’ characteristics and saw the signature of ammonia in the collected data.
Stanford researchers make ammonia from water droplets and nitrogen from the air
Stanford researchers have discovered a simple and environmentally sound way to make ammonia from tiny water droplets and nitrogen from the air.
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